Recognizance

West's Encyclopedia of American Law
COPYRIGHT 2005 The Gale Group, Inc.

RECOGNIZANCE

A recorded obligation, entered into before a tribunal, in which an individual pledges to perform a specific act or to subscribe to a certain course of conduct.

For example, an individual who owes money might enter into a recognizance whereby she agrees to satisfy the debt.

In criminal law, an individual who has been found guilty of an offense can be mandated to enter into a recognizance whereby she agrees to keep the peace in the future. An individual who has been accused but not yet convicted of a criminal offense may be allowed to go free prior to the trial without being required to post a bail bond. The accused individual provides the court with a formal written statement, which declares that his failure to appear will precipitate payment to the court of a specifically indicated sum of money. This is known as a release on one's own recognizance, or personal recognizance.

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recognizance

re·cog·ni·zance
/ riˈkägnəzəns; -ˈkänəzəns/
•
n. Law
a bond by which a person undertakes before a court or magistrate to observe some condition, esp. to appear when summoned:
he was released on his own recognizance.

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